Perfectly Natural Loathing
I received a lovely letter from a Reader the other day. Here’s the kernel:
I just came across an article on your website where you discuss how you stumbled into writing young adult fiction. I recently finished my first manuscript. After the initial euphoria and happy ignorance……my feelings suddenly morphed into absolute hatred for my amateur creation. It’s been almost a month since i touched or even looked at the file. I had an epiphany last week that is marinating and is now letting me consider not burning the usb drive that holds my file.
Which led me to thinking, you know, I have two times when I utterly loathe whatever I’m working on. The first is three-quarters to five-sixths of the way through the manuscript, when it becomes the Book or Story That Will Not Freaking Die Already. The other is somewhere in the middle of copyedits, and the loathing grows into frantic disgust and outright hatred through the proof pages, and only subsides a few months later when I get to see the finished book and forget what a total goddamn deathmarch it was finishing it for publication.
I have decided, after hearing from other writers, that this is normal. There are varying stages where the hatred hits, it’s different for each writer. I don’t know if some writers escape this feeling. But I am of the opinion that a dose of hatred is perfectly normal when one is finishing any huge complex creative endeavor. One gets tired, and it helps one “let go” of the work in question.
Letting go is so very necessary. Writers are inveterate fiddlers anyway, we’ll edit and edit and edit. On that path lies danger, Will Robinson. Perhaps the hatred is a way to make us loosen our deathgrip on our pretty little work so it can go out into the world, so it can fly and be free. Maybe it’s just sheer exhaustion after so much mental and emotional energy expended on the work, which helps us know when it’s time to make one last push and tie off the umbilical cord. (I find this metaphor endlessly amusing because I HAVE given birth.)
The important thing is to not stop writing during the slump in the last quarter-to-third of the book, or to not throw the thing on a bonfire when you’re finished. Both times it’s discipline that saves one, and we all know what I think of discipline.
So don’t throw away that amateur work, my dear. By finishing even one work, no matter how “amateur,” you have already done what 99% of people who “want to get around to writing someday” never do. You’ve stuck with it and created something start to finish. This is completely awesome, and you should be happy over it. Put the finished work in a drawer until you can stand to start revisions…
…and get started on the next one. *tongue in cheek* Hey, you want to experience that utter hatred again, right?
Over and out.
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Tags: editing makes one cranky, novel madness, pennyworth advice


May 27th, 2009 at 11:04 am
I completely agree with both of you guys. I’m using my WIP as a cup holder at the moment. I have 20 pages left to ‘red pen’ edit and then put them back into the computer version. Which I will print out… again… and read… again… and then if I don’t nuke it into orbit I may send out the damn thing to a lit agent like I’ve said I would. I’ve already started another project, completely in the opposite direction as this one because I’m so tired of this…thing already.
I’m rambly. Again, I agree. I think hating your work is part of the process of writing it and letting it go.
May 27th, 2009 at 11:33 am
BOOK HATE!!!!
I have it too. But it eventually goes away.
May 27th, 2009 at 11:36 am
I get two episodes of hate too – at the major “this character is changed, no going back!” moments of the book – a third through and two-thirds through, probably because I like my characters to start, and change is scary for all of us. But I KNOW that happens, so I just keep plugging along. Never having experienced page proofs (yet), I can’t say.
May 27th, 2009 at 3:55 pm
Unfortunately, I go through this phase at the worst possible time–once it’s too late.
I will work and work and revise and revise a manuscript before the deadline. Moments before I send it to my editor, I have a euphoric experience that lasts for several hours.
“I’m brilliant! This is the best thing I’ve ever written! I should have my bottom bronzed for posterity!”
I send off the manuscript with great glee.
This begins to fade slightly before I go to bed. The next day, for some reason, I will always take another look at the manucript I’ve already sent off, and my stomach begins to tighten.
“Oh . . . my . . . God. Did I really send this off? This is terrible! This is the worst thing I’ve ever done. Oh my God!”
This happens almost every time.
May 27th, 2009 at 6:41 pm
This really isn’t related to this post, but I couldn’t find anything in your archives and was curious what kind of research you did with the Jill Kismet series and Strange Angels (which I just picked up and am really enjoying). Did you create a lot of the demons yourself or did you use old mythology or legends that were out there?
May 28th, 2009 at 10:34 am
Wow. I am glad I read this. I thought it was just me.
I get this feeling about halfway through a project and I start second guessing the whole shebang. I’m in this stage right now with a book I already know will see print because my publisher wants it.
Thanks for posting about this (and those who replied with similar thoughts), puts my mind at ease in a big way. Now I can hit the mss tonight and beat the crap out of my keybaord.